June 20265 min read

How to remove your content from MrDeepFakes

By 1Kyle8, OnlyFans creatorReviewed by Zander SmallUpdated June 2026

The short answer

To remove a deepfake of you from MrDeepFakes, note that the original site shut down in 2025 and its videos were mirrored to copycat sites and file hosts. Send a removal demand under the TAKE IT DOWN Act to each platform, host, and CDN, report the URLs to Google and Bing, and re-file as mirrors appear.

What MrDeepFakes is

MrDeepFakes was, for years, one of the largest hubs for nonconsensual deepfake pornography: video where a real person's face is mapped onto explicit footage they never made or consented to. It went offline in May 2025 after a service provider pulled support and amid legal pressure abroad, days after the TAKE IT DOWN Act passed in the United States, as reported by NPR and Cybernews. Here is the hard part. The shutdown did not delete the videos. They were re-uploaded to successor sites and file hosts, and copycats still trade on the name. So removing a deepfake "from MrDeepFakes" in 2026 really means finding and killing the copies wherever they landed.

Step-by-step: removing a deepfake of you

  1. Document the copies. List the exact URLs of every page and file showing the deepfake, and note that it depicts you without consent. Take dated screenshots before you file, in case you need them later.
  2. Find where it actually lives now. The original domain is gone, so identify the live successor site or file host, then its CDN and origin host with a WHOIS/host lookup. Many of these sites sit behind Cloudflare, so you may need to file with Cloudflare to reach the real host.
  3. Send the removal demand on the strongest ground. For a nonconsensual sexual deepfake, your leverage is often broader than copyright. Under the TAKE IT DOWN Act, signed May 19, 2025, covered platforms must remove a nonconsensual intimate image, including a digital forgery, within 48 hours of a valid request from the depicted person, a duty the FTC began enforcing in 2026 (see Congress.gov and the FTC). Cite that notice-and-removal duty, and add a § 512 DMCA notice if you also hold copyright in the source footage. You can file under a name you are comfortable having on record, or have a service file under its name to keep your identity private.
  4. De-list from search in parallel. Submit the URLs to Google's and Bing's removal tools, including their forms for nonconsensual explicit imagery, so the copies stop surfacing even before a host acts.
  5. Re-file on re-upload. Deepfake copies get re-posted across small sites and file hosts. Keep the URL list, keep monitoring, keep sending.

Why MrDeepFakes content is hard to remove

The operators of these sites stay anonymous and host offshore, the same clip gets mirrored across many small sites at once, and every re-upload is a fresh hunt for the right host. On top of the logistics, this is content about your own body and likeness, and chasing it by hand is its own kind of harm. The law moved in the right direction in 2025, but enforcement still depends on someone finding each copy and sending each notice.

Let Fanlock handle MrDeepFakes content for you

Deepfake removal is built into Fanlock's Max tier, and it is personal to us. Morgpie has spent years speaking publicly against nonconsensual deepfakes, so this is the work, not a side feature. We identify the host behind each live copy, file under Fanlock's name so your identity never lands in a public record, lean on the platform's notice-and-removal duty and escalate to the CDN and host when they stall, de-list from Google, Bing, and Yahoo, and re-file when a copy reappears. Pirate-Intent Search finds those copies the way the people looking for them do, by searching Google for the same terms, so a re-uploaded deepfake reaches us the moment it lands instead of weeks later. Our Google removals run about 97.5%, verifiable in Google's public Transparency Report.

FAQ

Isn't MrDeepFakes already shut down?

The original site went offline in May 2025, yes. But the videos were re-uploaded to successor sites and file hosts before and after it closed, and copycat sites still use the name. Removal today means finding and taking down those copies, not the original domain.

How do I remove a deepfake of me if I don't own the original video?

You often do not need to. For a nonconsensual sexual deepfake, the TAKE IT DOWN Act and state nonconsensual-imagery and right-of-publicity laws give you grounds independent of copyright. A DMCA notice is an added lever when you also hold copyright in the source footage.

Does the TAKE IT DOWN Act force sites to remove deepfakes?

According to Congress.gov, covered platforms must remove a nonconsensual intimate image, including a deepfake, within 48 hours of a valid request from the depicted person, with the FTC enforcing. Offshore sites that ignore it are reached through their host, CDN, and search engines instead.

What if the deepfake keeps getting re-uploaded?

Expect it on this category of site. The fix is monitoring plus automatic re-filing, so each copy is caught and removed as it appears rather than only the one you found first.

Find out where a deepfake of you is hosted right now

Run a free scan with just your username and we will show you where you are exposed across deepfake sites, mirrors, and file hosts, then handle the removals for you. No card, no selfie until you have seen what we found.

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Fanlock removes your content from MrDeepFakes automatically

You don't have to do any of this by hand. Sign up and Fanlock finds your content on MrDeepFakes (and across search, social, and Telegram), files the takedowns under our name so your identity stays private, and re-files automatically when it reappears. Our Google removals run about 97.5%, verifiable in Google's public Transparency Report.

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1Kyle8

About 1Kyle8

OnlyFans creator

1Kyle8 is an OnlyFans creator who removed her own leaks with Fanlock. She writes these removal guides from experience; the technical and legal steps are reviewed by Zander Small, Fanlock co-founder. More about the Fanlock team →